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April in Latin America: All the tech news you shouldn’t miss from the past month

April was a busy month in Latin America, particularly in Brazil, where companies have been in a rush to get things done before the FIFA World Cup. Here’s the news you don’t want to miss:

Big players

Chinese tech giant Huawei has moved its Latin American headquarters from Brazil to Argentina, where it already had offices, InfoTechnology reported. The move will reportedly cost $20 million and generate 200 additional jobs in Argentina.

Samsung is launching a new project called Ocean Brasil, Brazilian media outlet Tela Viva News reported. It consists of physical training centers for developers, the first one of which will be located in São Paulo, followed by a new branch in Manaus in the second half of 2014. These will be the company’s first training units outside of South Korea. Both will host courses to teach students, developers and wannabes how to code for Samsung mobile devices and TV sets. The company also plans to bring its Developer Day to São Paulo for the first time in the coming months.

Intel is putting an end to some of its operations in Costa Rica and eliminating 1,500 jobs, Reuters reported. A spokesman explained that the chipmaker would move assembly and testing tasks to existing sites in China, Malaysia and Vietnam. 1,000 employees remaining in Costa Rica will focus on engineering, finance, HR and R&D. The chipmaker also expects to add another 200 “high-value positions” in the country later this year, although it is still reducing its workforce on a global level in an attempt to cut costs.

Google plans to use the .soy TLD (“I am” in Spanish) to target the US Hispanic market, a Google executive disclosed during a panel discussion at the Hispanicize 2014 conference in Miami last month. According to the Miami Herald, the domain “will be targeted at bilingual, bi-cultural Hispanics, and will have content in both Spanish and English.”

The state of São Paulo will join forces with Microsoft and invest R$9.7 million ($4.3 million USD) to develop a crime data aggregation and analysis platform called Detecta, ZDNet reported. The technology behind Detecta has been in place in New York City since 2012, but it will be the first time it will be used outside of the Big Apple.

Brazil is one of the four countries in which Twitter is rolling out its TV conversation targeting’ tool, alongside Canada, France and Spain. This service allows networks and brands to target viewers with Promoted Tweets and comes on time for the FIFA World Cup in the country. In addition, Twitter is beta testing the tool in Argentina, Australia, Germany, Italy, Japan and Mexico, with more countries to follow.

Chinese smartphone manufacturer Xiaomi confirmed its plans to expand to 10 more countries this year, starting with Malaysia, the Philippines, India, Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam, followed by Russia, Turkey, Brazil and Mexico.

Music video service Vevo launched its own services in Mexico, MusicWeek reported. The country was already driving the second largest number of views for Vevo videos on YouTube, a partnership that is set to continue. A few weeks ago, Vevo also released a redesigned iOS app in the 13 countries where it was already present: Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Poland, Spain, the UK and the US.

Meanwhile, Spotify is reportedly having difficulties with its planned rollout in Brazil. According to Estadão’s tech blog, Link, it had to postpone its target launch date to May 20 due to problems with payment methods and delays in its negotiations with music labels. As we reported last month, beta testers testified that pretty much everything else seemed already in place for the big day, including translations, pricing and even local advertising.

Yelp’s reviews are now available in Mexico, following an earlier launch in Brazil, CNET reported. The company put most of its focus on building content for Mexico City. While it only has one Mexico-based employee, it also bought data from a third-party company and hired local temps to check info, take pictures and sometimes write reviews, CNET explained.

Startups expanding

Square launched a point of sale and suite of business tools in Spanish and held a networking event for Miami-based small businesses, the Miami Herald reported. The mobile payments startup is hoping it will help enroll Latino sellers across the United States.

Voice acting marketplace VoiceBunny is launching in Spanish, its founder Alex Torrenegra told Pulso Social. According to the Colombian entrepreneur, the startup plans to go global, and its expansion from the US into Latin America is only the first step.

…and new ventures

Space Monkey announced that the manufacture of its personal cloud storage hardware would move from Shanghai, China to facilities in Guadalajara, Mexico. According to the CEO of the Utah-based company, Clint Gordon-­Carroll, “competitive pricing, simpler logistics, quality labor, and reduced shipping costs all combine to make this choice a no brainer.” Its new ties to Mexico don’t stop there: it also announced a new round of funding led by Monterrey-based fund Alta Ventures, which it expects “to accelerate adoption of [its] service in Latin American markets and beyond.”

French designer Philippe Starck and a collective of artists launched TOG, a platform for customizable, 3D printed furniture. The first TOG physical store is scheduled to open in São Paulo in a few months. As for the Web platform, it is reportedly set to become more open-source in the future, with users uploading and sharing their own designs.

Some got acquired…

Latin America’s e-commerce giant MercadoLibre will pay about $40 million to acquire VMK, a company that own two major real estate websites in Chile and Mexico, DealBook reported. $5 million of that cash transaction depends on VMK’s properties meeting certain milestones, CEO Marcos Galperin told DealBook.

Brazilian VC firm Ideiasnet sold its majority stake in iMusica to mobile carrier Claro, which will now have full control of this digital music distribution service. Based on security filing, this transaction values the company at R$49.1 million, around $22 million USD.

Brazilian IT solutions firm Stefanini acquired an undisclosed but significant stake in Datastorm, a newly launched venture that will offer tailored big data analytics to Latin American companies across a wide range of sectors, from telecom to finance. While numbers remain confidential, Datastorm’s CEO Leandro Faria described the deal as the equivalent of “skipping seed round and series A.” In practical terms, Datastorm will operate under its own brand and with separate operations in Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais. Still, it expects to benefit from the distribution network and expertise of its corporate partner, which controls two seats in Datastorm’s board.

…and some got funded

British VC firm Amadeus Capital Partners made its first investment in Latin America, DealBook reported. The fund led an $8.9 million investment round in Brazilian online insurance price comparison and brokerage startup Bidu. Previous investors Monashees Capital, Bertelsmann Group and Otto Capital also participated.

Spanish Uber-like service Cabify raised a $8 million series A round, TechCrunch reported. It will use this new funding to accelerate its growth in Latin America.

Tengelmann Ventures invested in several of Rocket Internet’s portfolio companies, Deutsche Startups revealed. Beneficiaries include Carmudi, Clickbus, Easy Taxi and Lamudi, which all have operations in Latin America.

Fashion e-commerce player E2E received R$5 million ($2.25 million USD) from A5 Internet Investments, Startupi reported. In addition, A5 also invested R$3,5 million (around $1.6 million USD) in e-commerce platform 4Good The venture’s portfolio was already gearing towards fashion and e-commerce, including companies such as ClickOn, Dress&Go, Guiato, Mercado.etc, OQVestir and Uselets.

Chilean fund InverSur Capital invested in Spanish-born natural language processing startup Inbenta‘s $2 million series A round.The company has offices in Chile, France, the Netherlands, Spain and the US. Inversur’s funding comes from Amérigo Chile Early Stage & Growth Fund, which it manages on behalf of Telefónica.

The Government of the City of Buenos Aires is putting a program in place to invest in startups, in partnership with 5 accelerators it will soon start to shortlist. According to Apertura, the accelerators will be in charge of deciding which teams should receive funding as part of Buenos Aires Emprende.

Argentine accelerator NXTP Labs announced the list of 25 startups that joined its sixth batch (disclosure: my startup MonoLibre is one of them). In addition, it expanded beyond Buenos Aires, Montevideo and San Francisco with the launch of local operations in Chile, managed by Argentine serial entrepreneur Tiburcio de la Cárcova. The new fund will dedicate $15 million to early-stage startups, thanks to support from the Chilean Economic Development Agency (CORFO).

Hardware-focused accelerator HardTech Labs welcomed its “class zero” of four startups, three based in the US and one in Mexico. According to Fox Business, its goal is to connect San Diego’s tech culture with Tijuana’s manufacturing skills.

In the eye of the law

USAID publicly denied several elements from earlier AP reports alleging that the agency had secretly created a social media platform dubbed “Cuban Twitter” to foster unrest on the island. However, it confirmed that it had funded the microblogging platform, called ZunZuneo, whose operations were based in Costa Rica. According to USAID, the platform had around 68,000 users at its peak.

São Paulo welcomed two-day global conference NETmundial, which saw governments, NGOs and entities from all around the world debate Internet governance. Unfortunately, its final statement was criticized by Internet activists, among other things for its vagueness on net neutrality and mass surveillance.

The highlight of the event came from Brazil itself, with President Dilma Rousseff putting her final signature to the country’s landmark bill on Internet, known as Marco Civil, which covers principles such as net neutrality, freedom of expression and right to privacy. After four years of negotiation, the project had received the green light from Brazil’s Chamber of Deputies last March, followed by the Senate’s approval last month.